When I woke this morning, the raw, cold drizzling rain was sputtering outside my bedroom window, trickling like tears down the panes of glass, blurring the view into my backyard. I wanted to stay in bed, but, motherhood was calling. Occasionally, the sun has tried to poke through from behind the darkness, raising my hopes each time. I’m cheering it on because I need it to brighten my mood and not just my day. As I walked around my house this morning picking up strewn pajamas, inside out with the underwear still in them, off the floor, wiping breakfast bread crumbs off the counter and putting away the 15 dolls (really, 15?!) taken out by my girls for 2 minutes of play before they hustled off to school, I reflected on how this weather pattern accurately represents how I used to feel about my role as a mama and homemaker. It’s not that I didn’t love being a mother to my three kids, it was just that sometimes I hated the parts of motherhood that didn’t actually involve much mothering at all. I love the nurturing side of motherhood; the cuddles, holding hands on walks while having sweet little conversations, bedtime stories. It’s the repetitive, mundane, mind-numbingly boring tasks that would get to me, like the hours spent cleaning up my kids’ morning messes once they were off to school, then repeating it all again for afternoon and night messes. The endless laundry that never earns a check-mark on my task list because it’s never fully done. Driving everyone to fun activities while I sit and watch. Making meals that someone always complains about, scrubbing toilets, grocery shopping, etc etc and finally, realizing that I still have days, weeks, and years left of all this. I needed a new perspective; I needed my sunshine on a cloudy day.
I think part of my perspective problem began when I was just a little girl. I was raised in a poor, single-parent home without many opportunities. The first seven years were spent down a dusty dirt road in central Florida where we played in the summer in the dirt and orange groves and were called white trash at school. The next seven years were spent in the inner city of a tough neighborhood in eastern Massachusetts where we played stick ball in mill parking lots and were called street rats. We didn’t participate in any after school programs or activities, as Taylor Swift would say, like never ever…ever. Most of the time we didn’t own a car to drive us anywhere, and we had no money to pay for anything even if we could get there. We walked home, did our homework, our daily chores, then played outside with whatever daylight was left. I just kept thinking that one day my life would launch and I’d finally get to go off and do something interesting, something important, something fun, be someone. I was b o r e d. After high school, I went to college for a year and a half before I realized I couldn’t actually afford to be there. I dropped out and within 2 months had found a humdrum full-time job as a bank teller, waiting for my college loan payments to begin. Shortly thereafter, I was married, still working full time and also learning how to take care of my home. Two years later, when I was 24 years old, our son was born and my life as a full-time homemaker and mother began. My life had hardly launched; there had never come a let’s-see-what-I-can-really-do season of time where I got to explore life and opportunities before I found myself in my permanent role of caring for and supporting everyone else.
Over the next 10 years I had two more children, and each time I watched the clock restart on my perceived freedom- when I’d finally get to go discover myself, pursue my interests, become something. This was presumably going to take place when the kids were at a more independent age, in school full time, less needy of me. I would get to have a life, find myself, go back to college. When my last daughter was born, I calculated that time would come when I’d be around 45 years old, another 10 years away (insert frown face, the one with a dripping tear). This realization overwhelmed me. I felt like I was looking at my future through the backside of binoculars, it just kept getting further away. From 22 to 45 years old, the best years of my life; it would total 23 years of doing the same thing, locked in this role that everyone else seemed to define for me, bringing me further from any sense of myself. It seemed like years of my life were being robbed from me that I could never get back. I’d be going back to college so late, entering the workforce with years of experience missing. After being with toddlers for years, I even doubted my ability to string together a sentence that sounded professional and contained two-syllable words. My vocabulary had certainly diminished. Again, I dearly loved my kids, but it just felt so unfair, so empty, spending my life making sure everyone else could fulfill their potential, be happy, be supported, entertained, cultivated, and cultured when no one was doing that for me. That last part was the part that really bugged me. It was also where I was the most mistaken.
With honest reflection, I could look back and clearly see that God had never stopped taking care of me, giving me very unique experiences and opportunities, teaching me who I was and showing me his endless love for me. I just couldn’t see what he was doing with me now. I wanted God to show me my purpose for today. I needed to know I wasn’t just a cog in the wheel of someone elses life; that he had made me with a specific purpose too. Why did he make me love science and philosophy, writing and astronomy, piano and finance if all I was ever going to do was cook and clean? I felt like a race car sitting in a barn, waiting for my chance to rev my engine and take off, but all I ever did was beep my horn and turn on my wipers. And then a few things happened that helped me change my perspective.
The first happened during one sporadic bible reading devotion. I say sporadic because quiet times didn’t really exist in my house. Once, somewhere in the middle of raising two rambunctious toddlers, I remember becoming determined to rise early and start my day in prayer and bible reading, but my youngest had plans of her own. With her supersonic ears, she woke at the slightest sound, matching me hour for hour, minute for minute with her early rising. I would tiptoe out to the living room, grab my bible and coffee and would just get settled in on the couch when she would toddle out and climb up on me, bouncing on my stomach, rumpling the pages of my bible, spilling my coffee, and demanding breakfast. I wanted to give up before I began. It seemed like I never had a moment to myself. However, on one rare occasion of solitude (probably in the bathroom with the door locked), I sat and read my bible with a desperate plea in my heart for God to help me. I felt like I was drowning in motherhood and I needed a life raft. I had read it before, but this time as I read Matthew 6:33, it just jumped out at me, or better, into me. Its message filled me with hope for my own future, as well as a purpose for my day to day. It reads, “But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.” The paragraph that contains this verse in my bible is labeled “Do Not be Anxious”. It all just hit home for me. I felt God urging me to embrace this season of my life and trust that if I kept seeking first God’s kingdom, then I could trust God would add anything and everything to my life that he intended for me when the time came. Even if I was a no-name, in a small town, with no connections and almost no marketable skills, I could trust that the creator who made me knew the potential he had knit into me and he would open the doors when it was time. There’s no wasted time when you are pursuing God’s will. God reminded me through his word that I would not get lost in the shuffle. Through each day of cooking, cleaning, and trudging through the often mundane responsibilities of homemaking and motherhood, I was newly encouraged that I could seek his Kingdom in how I honored and cared for the blessings in my life today, that I could model a Christ-like attitude for my children this moment, and I could find purpose in the privilege of getting to serve my family right now, because he had my future in his hands. Tomorrow didn’t have to make me anxious, because I once again trusted that God had a plan for me.
My second revelation happened through a series of articles and interviews I read over the course of a few months. They were in different magazines and on various channels, but I kept seeing and hearing the same thing. Highly successful people being interviewed, revealing that the one thing they wish they could go back and change was having more time with their kids, their families. Here I was, having that opportunity every day and realizing I was often resentful and overwhelmed, wishing these tedious years away. With newfound hope for my future through Matthew 6:33, I also heard the second part of God’s message for me through these people who were living the kind of life I often wished I could be living. I listened to them talk, not of their great career successes, discoveries, and accomplishments, but instead, of lamenting their time lost with their loved ones. I heard over and over, “I just wish I had spent more time with my kids.” I became more determined than ever to make the most of this season of my life with my children. I would purposefully engage and become a part of their world and experiences and leave a joyful imprint as often as I could. I wanted to listen more and talk less, taking in all their little nuances and ever-growing minds and hearts. I knew that I was going to be here doing household chores for a long time, regardless of my attitude, but my children would grow up and be gone one day and I wouldn’t enjoy these years with them unless I changed my attitude. It would stretch me, but I would keep trying, seeking, and trusting that God was right there with me.
It wasn’t until I was able to release my fears for my future to God that I was able to embrace the gift of the present. I’m realizing He’s not just “adding unto me” in my future, He’s adding unto me the joys of right now.
Matthew 6:33- “But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you.”







